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Then she yelled at him. “You wanted to get some cigarettes, you asshole. Don’t blame this on me, you son of a bitch.” It would be frosty at their house for a while.

The man looked embarrassed. He continued, “Anyway, when we were at the gate going out of town, one of the blue ribbon guys said the cops—what’s left of them, which isn’t many—and the gangs took the food from Martin’s and now are selling it. The FC guy heard what the blue ribbon guy said and just shrugged.”

Great. Gangs and rogue cops and the government were running a giant racket called the City of Frederickson. At least a truck of food got in. But, now the gangs had it. Nice.

Grant wondered if the whole country was like this. He figured the bigger cities would be worse. Olympia would be bad, Seattle worse, and God forbid imagining what was going on in L.A. right now.

Just then, Grant noticed some of the Pierce Point guards scurrying around. There was a black man with his hands up walking slowly toward the bridge.

Grant looked at the man. He knew—he just knew—that this was important.

I am providing for you.

Chapter 117

Gideon Arrives

(May 12)

Grant yelled to the guards, “Lower your weapons! Don’t shoot him.” Grant had no idea why he was yelling this. He just knew that they needed this guy walking toward them. It was like Grant knew the guy. But he didn’t.

The black man got about twenty-five yards from the gate and, out of breath, yelled, “You need to come quick. Come quick. Before it’s too late.”

Grant ran toward him. The other members of the Team followed Grant out of instinct. They didn’t know why, but they assumed Grant knew something they didn’t know. Which was true. Grant knew he needed to help this man, he just didn’t know why.

The dogs were going wild and Dan yelled, “What the hell are you doing?” Grant and the Team kept running. Grant came up to the black man and said, “How can we help?”

The man, a blue collar looking guy in his forties, was surprised these well-armed white militia-looking guys just ran over to him and asked how they could help. He expected militia types to not like people with his skin color much.

“My truck,” the black man said. “My truck. Some guys are trying to steal it.” He started to put his hand in his pocket and realized that that was a bad idea. He pointed to his front pocket and said, “I have the keys in here. They’re coming after me!”

“Who?” Wes asked.

“Where?” Bobby asked.

“How many?” Scotty asked.

“Come on,” Grant yelled as he started running across the bridge and up the road where the man had just come down. “Let’s go!” Once again, the Team followed Grant, assuming he knew something they didn’t.

Grant motioned for the man to take the lead and show them where the truck was, which he did. They came to the intersection of where Pierce Point Road connected to the road to Frederickson. The black man pointed to the right. Grant shouldered his AR and went around the corner. He paused and motioned for the others to come, too. They did, just like they’d practiced a million times at the range.

Sure enough. A few hundred yards down the road was a semi-truck parked on the side of the road with its hazard lights on.

The black man yelled, “There were two of them. They still might be around, but I don’t see their car. Be careful. They had weapons.” Grant noticed that he said “weapons” instead of “guns.” He must have some military or law enforcement experience to use a term like that.

It was time for the Team to do its first SWAT work. Let’s see if we’re any good or whether we die right here and now, Grant thought. He was serious. They might die in the next few seconds.

The Team fanned out and started looking for bad guys. There were no cars on the road, as traffic had been virtually non-existent. Grant stayed with the black man.

“What’s your name?” Grant asked.

“Gideon. Gideon Armstrong,” he said.

“OK, Gideon, what happened?” Grant said, a little winded. He was in decent shape, but this sprinting and mentally preparing to be in a gun fight tired him out.

“I’m driving,” Gideon said, winded. “I have just one more load and then I’m done. I knew this was dangerous, but the money was great. So I see a police car blocking the road up there,” he said pointing up the road away from the gate. “I slow down. ‘Great, some cops are gonna jack my load’, I say to myself.”

“Are the bad guys cops?” Grant asked quickly. He wanted to know who to be looking out for. He didn’t have time to chat.

“Kinda,” Gideon said. “They were in a cop car, but they had on BDUs” Gideon said. Using the term “BDUs”, which stood for “battle dress uniforms,” told Grant that Gideon had been in the Army or other military service in the 80s or 90s when that term was used to describe woodland camouflage fatigues.

“Did they have hard hats?” Grant asked.

Gideon’s eyes lit up. “Yeah! Yellow ones. How did you know?”

Grant yelled to the Team, “Be looking for a cop car with FCs in hard hats and fatigues.” He looked back to Gideon and said, “Where are they now?”

Gideon looked up and down the road and said, “I don’t know, man. They were here a few minutes ago.” Then he put his hand on his pocket. “The keys. I took the keys.” He thought a while.

“It happened so fast,” Gideon said. “Now I remember. One had a gun pointed at me and the other motioned for me to roll down the window. I did. The one without the gun said he was ‘commandeering’ the truck. I’m like, ‘hell no, you’re not’. So I took the keys out of the ignition, raised my hands, and got out of the cab.”

Gideon went on, “I knew these white boys—no offense—would shoot my ass once they got what I’m hauling. It’s pretty valuable,” he said with a smile. “So I had nothing to lose. Besides, my home is back in Philly so I’m pretty much dead here now, anyway. So I tell them, ‘It’s yours’ and I walk away with my hands up. Those dumb asses didn’t even realize I took the keys out of the ignition. They were high fiving each other just staring at the truck, like they won. Well, shit, they can’t move that trailer far without the cab running. So I start running down the road and I see the entrance to your place. Then I see your guards and I think, ‘Oh shit. They’ll shoot me too.’ That’s what happened.”

“Where is the cop car?” Grant yelled. He wanted to know right now.

“Dunno,” Gideon said. “They might have left when they realized that I had the keys. Or they might be going back to get some bolt cutters for the locks on the back.”

Grant realized they needed to get that truck moving and into Pierce Point. “Get it running and go across the bridge where the guards are. I’ll tell them to let you in. Move. I don’t want those FC coming back.”

“FC?” Gideon asked.

“Later,” Grant yelled as he ran toward the Team. “We’ll talk later. Move that thing now. We’ll cover you.”

“Roger that,” Gideon said. He jumped up in the cab and started it up.

Grant yelled to Pow, who was closest to the gate, “Tell them it’s OK for this guy to bring the truck in. And tell them to be ready to shoot up a cop car if one comes by.”

Pow yelled, “Roger” and started running toward the bridge.

Grant ran up to the rest of the Team, who had taken cover around the truck and were scanning the area, and told them what was going on. No sign of a cop car or any other car so far.